Where Is the Certificate Holder Listed on a Certificate of Insurance?

The standard ACORD 25 form shows the certificate holder information in a clearly labeled box in the bottom left section. This box should list your complete legal name and address exactly as they appear in your contract.

Common errors include listing the wrong entity name, abbreviating your business name incorrectly, or using a site address instead of your corporate headquarters. Be sure to check the additional remarks page as well, as it sometimes includes extra details about policy limits or coverage specifications that apply to your project.

Who Is the Certificate Holder on a COI?

The certificate holder is you or your organization when you request proof of insurance from a contractor, vendor, or third party. Knowing how to check the certificate holder on a COI is essential, because your business name should appear in the designated certificate holder box on the certificate of insurance issued by the insurance company.

This section acts as a notification point. If the vendor’s insurance policy is canceled or changed before the expiration date, you’ll be notified. However, being listed as the certificate holder does not mean you’re covered under the policy. Coverage only applies if you’re added through an endorsement, which may involve an additional insured endorsement cost and specific coverage limits.

On a standard ACORD COI, the certificate holder box appears in the bottom left corner and lists your business name, address, and contact information. If your company is missing or incorrect, the COI must be updated before work begins—especially when general liability insurance is required to manage risk.

What to Verify on a Certificate of Insurance Before Accepting It

  1. Certificate holder information: Confirm your legal business name and address are listed correctly in the certificate holder section.
  2. Policy status and dates: Check that the insurance policy is active and that the effective and expiration dates cover the full project or contract period.
  3. Coverage types: Verify the required policies are listed, such as general liability insurance, workers’ compensation, or auto liability, based on the scope of work.
  4. Coverage limits: Ensure the policy limits meet or exceed the amounts required in your contract or vendor agreement.
  5. Insurance company details: Confirm the insurance company issuing the policy is legitimate and authorized to provide coverage in your state.
  6. Additional insured status: If your contract requires it, verify that an additional insured endorsement has been issued separately, as this is not guaranteed by being listed as the certificate holder.
  7. Consistency with contracts: Cross-check the COI details against your agreement to ensure names, limits, and coverage align.
  8. Expiration monitoring: Note upcoming expiration dates and request updated certificates before coverage lapses.

Does Being a Certificate Holder Give You Insurance Coverage?

No, and this confusion leads to real problems. The certificate holder only receives proof that the insured entity has active coverage. You can't file claims or receive protection under their policy.

If you need actual coverage protection, you must be listed as an additional insured on the insurance certificate. That requires a separate additional insured endorsement to the policy. Many contract disputes stem from this misunderstanding.

How Do I Know Who the Policy Holder Is on My Insurance?

The policyholder owns the insurance policy and pays the premiums. On a COI, they're listed in the "Insured" section at the top left. When you request a COI, the policyholder has their insurer or authorized agent issue the certificate and list you as the certificate holder. 

When the policy coverage begins, verify that the policy's effective date aligns with your project timeline. Some vendors submit COIs before coverage starts or after it expires, leaving you exposed.

What's the Difference Between Certificate Holder and Additional Insured?

Here's the critical distinction: the certificate holder receives notification about insurance status, while an additional insured can file claims and receives coverage under the policy.

In 2023, there was a 15% increase in lawsuits related to liability claims in the construction industry due to inadequate insurance coverage, many stemming from certificate holder vs additional insured confusion.

If your contract requires additional insured status, simply being the certificate holder won't protect you. You need a separate endorsement that extends liability insurance coverage to your organization. Check the description box to confirm that this endorsement exists. To read more about How to add additional insured on a COI, read our blog.

Many organizations also require vendors to waive subrogation rights, which prevents the insurance company from suing you to recover claim payments. This requires specific subrogation language in the policy.

What Should You Do If Your Name Isn't Listed as the Certificate Holder?

Request a corrected certificate immediately. Your vendor should contact their insurance agent to issue a new certificate with your correct information in the certificate holder section.

Don't accept verbal assurances that coverage exists even though your name is missing. Without your name on the certificate, you won't get critical alerts about coverage changes.

For organizations managing multiple parties and dozens of vendor relationships, manually tracking insurance status creates gaps that allow coverage lapses to go unnoticed. illumend empowers you to track, verify, and manage insurance compliance in real-time, so you can focus on your projects rather than chasing paperwork.

How Do You Verify a COI?

Verifying COIs means checking that the certificate matches your insurance requirements and that coverage is real. Start by confirming that your name appears correctly as the certificate holder.

Next, verify that policy limits meet your contract requirements and check that expiration dates haven't passed. Contact the insurance company directly if something seems off. Fake certificates exist, and vendors sometimes submit issues certificates before coverage is actually bound.

illumend, powered by myCOI, streamlines this entire compliance process by automatically tracking policy expiration date information and verifying that all certificate holder requirements are met. The platform's built-in AI guide, Lumie™, explains exactly what's missing on non-compliant certificates, so you don't need an insurance degree to become confident in COI management. Schedule your demo today!

Blog & Insights

Moving Beyond the Outdated Insurance Compliance Model

Does AI Add Value to COI Tracking Beyond Traditional Automated Software Solutions or Manual Tracking?

Explore AI in COI tracking, and learn how illumend enables one-click vendor invites, compliance feedback through Lumie™, and seamless Procore integration.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational

What Does Indemnity Mean in Insurance?

Learn what indemnity in insurance means, and discover how illumend simplifies insurance compliance and can help you navigate insurance industry language.
Admin 101
Insurance Knowledge
Educational

What Is an ACORD 27?

If you've ever stared at an insurance form with no idea what it means or whether you even need it, this one's for you.
Admin 101
Insurance Knowledge
Educational

Why Do Companies Require a COI? Key Business Reasons

Companies require a COI to verify active insurance coverage, transfer liability risk, and ensure vendors meet contract and compliance requirements.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

What Is the Purpose of a COI & Why It’s So Important

COIs prove a business is properly insured and compliant, reducing risk for partners and vendors. Learn what they cover, why they matter, and how long they’re valid.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

What Is The Difference Between A Policy And A Certificate Of Insurance?

The difference between a policy and a certificate of insurance is that a policy defines coverage terms, while a COI summarizes proof of insurance for third parties.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

What Is a Certificate of Insurance: A Complete Guide (2026)

What is a certificate of insurance? Learn what it is, why businesses need one, what details it includes, and how to request a certificate.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

How To Add An Additional Insured On A COI

Learn how to add an additional insured on a COI, who to include, when to request it, and how to confirm it’s listed correctly.
Insurance Knowledge
Consideration
Admin Mastery

How to Get a COI for an Event: A Simple Step-by-Step Guide

Confused about how to get a COI for an event? Find out when you need a COI, how to request one from vendors, and what you can do to simplify the process.
Insurance Knowledge
Informational
Admin 101

Is a COI the Same as a Declaration Page? Key Differences

A COI is not the same as a declaration page; a COI provides proof of insurance for third parties, while a declaration page outlines policy details for the policyholder.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

What Is The Difference Between A Policy And A Certificate Of Insurance?

The difference between a policy and a certificate of insurance is that a policy defines coverage terms, while a COI summarizes proof of insurance for third parties.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

How Do You Show Additional Insurance on a COI?

Confused about “additional insured”? This guide explains what it means, where it appears on a COI, how to add someone to your policy, and how to avoid common COI mistakes.
Insurance Knowledge
Consideration
Admin Mastery

What Is Professional Liability on a COI?

Professional liability on a COI is proof a vendor has Errors & Omissions coverage, protecting against claims of negligence, mistakes, or failure to deliver services.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

What Must Be Included in a Certificate Of Insurance?

What must be included in a certificate of insurance? It should list the policyholder, coverage types, limits, effective dates, insurer, and certificate holder details.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

When Do You Need A COI For An LLC

When do you need a COI for an LLC? You typically need a certificate of insurance when signing contracts, leasing property, hiring vendors, or starting client work.
Insurance Knowledge
Informational
Admin 101

How To Read A Certificate Of Insurance: A Complete Guide

This guide walks you through every section of a COI, so you can confidently review what your contractors and partners send you.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

Is COI The Same As Liability Insurance?

Are you a small business owner or operations manager trying to figure out the difference between COI and insurance documents? If so, you're not alone
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

What Is A COI Request Form And When Do I Need One?

What is a COI request form? Learn when you need one, why it matters for insurance compliance, and what information a COI request form should include.
Insurance Knowledge
Informational
Admin 101

What Is a COI in Contracting? [Definition & Guide]

What is a COI in contracting? Learn what a Certificate of Insurance is, who provides it, required coverage types, and when contractors need one.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

How To Ask for A COI (And When You Need One)

Request an official Certificate of Insurance (COI) to ensure your vendor has adequate insurance coverage meeting your contractual requirements.
Insurance Knowledge
Educational
Admin 101

Certificate of Insurance Purchasing Explained

This guide has been designed to break it down in the simplest way possible for you, so you can fully understand what it is, how it works, and why it’s so important.
Product Education
Consideration
Admin 101

Get The Lantern

illumend updates, designed to light the way to insurance confidence.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.